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A qualitative study of resident learning in ambulatory clinic: The importance of exposure to 'breakdown' in settings that support effective response

  • C. Scott Smitha, b(Author)
    ,
  • Magdalena Morrisa, c(Author)
    ,
  • Chris Francovicha, d(Author)
    ,
  • William Hilla(Author)
    ,
  • Janet Gieselmana(Author)
  • aBoise VA Medical Center
    ,
  • bUniversity of Washington
    ,
  • cBoise State University
    ,
  • dNorthwest Reg. Fac. Devmt. Center
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Abstract

Qualitative analysis of a large ethnographic database from observations of a resident teaching clinic revealed three important findings. The first finding was that breakdown, a situation where an 'actor' (such as a person or the group) is not achieving expected effectiveness, was the most important category because of its frequency and explanatory power. The next finding was that exposure to breakdown was a necessary ingredient for reflective learning. The final finding was that effective response to breakdown (with concomitant reflective learning) requires six factors to be present: the patient is engaged directly; responsibility is matched to authority; tools are matched to tasks; information resources are matched to need; values are matched between co-participants; and expectations are matched with capacity. These findings have implications for planning, improvements and further studies in ambulatory teaching clinics.